I could not talk him down, or listen him up, though that is what I was trained to do, tried to do he gazed only at the street, his final resting place, where he would soon be a crushed crimson spectacle for greedy and empty eyes whose mouths would tell of his demise, but none even knew his name, I learned it was Everett, and that he had three daughters lost in suburbia, eons from this ledge where he stood, and talked to a stranger who was stranger than he for I looked to the skies above the humming city, as if they would be my salvation an airy home to spread wings with angels, and glide endlessly through blue heavens, but Everett knew there were no winged saviors awaiting him to grab him before his lonely leap only the unmovable slab of concrete below the craned necks of other flatlanders who would watch his final descent and not realize his brief eternal fall through the invisible place between two worlds would be the closest any would ever be to freedom
as a teen, I often equated death with freedom--seems I have returned to that theme here--Everett was actually the name of a person who was my roommate briefly who later did take his own life